Truman and Churchill versus Stalin

At the end of World War II, the Soviet
army was in parts of Germany and Austria, in Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, Czechoslovakia
and in Poland. At the Yalta conference in February 1945, Josef Stalin represented
the Soviet Union and promised "free and unfettered" elections in Poland and
in the other East European countries that it occupied. Stalin feared, with good
reason, that free elections in Poland would bring to power Poles who were critical
of him and the Soviet Union. Stalin had been involved in the murder of Poles, including the Katyn massacre. He and his colleagues were mindful of Poland's
history of hostility to the Bolshevik Revolution, including Poland's invasion
of Soviet territory in the early 1920s, and they were mindful of Poland having been a
corridor for invasions eastward in their direction. It is hard to imagine Poland launching
another war against the Soviet Union or contributing to another invasion of
the Soviet Union, but Stalin saw it necessary for the sake of
security to have a regime in Poland that was friendly to the Soviet Union. Free and unfettered elections in Poland were not to be.

Harry S. Truman

Stalin's heavy hand in Poland was foremost in turning the United States away from what had been its friendship with the Soviet Union. Just before his death in early April, President Roosevelt had been disappointed with and angered by Stalin, and now it was President Truman who was angry with him.

Stalin was interested in protecting the kind of Soviet Union that he had created. He wanted to protect Stalinism.
This was more important to him than the best of relations with the United States.
Stalin still spoke of being at war with capitalism. He believed that another
economic depression was coming for the capitalist economies. He had told Milovan
Djilas of Yugoslavia that another war would come in twenty years or so with
the anti-Communist West. He had stated his belief that the Soviet Union would
recover by then, and he was looking forward to meeting that war with his brand
of unity. To repeat a quote from a previous chapter, Stalin had said
to Djilas: "If the Slavs keep united and maintain solidarity, no one in the
future will be able to move a finger against them. Not even a finger!" note8

In May, 1945, President Truman reacted to Stalin's policies in Poland by
cutting off all aid to the Soviet Union, and in late August he expressed misgivings
about a world dominated by rivalry between the Soviet Union and the rest of
the world. As he saw it, the Soviet Union did not really want peace. Truman
was aware of Stalinist expectations of another economic depression in the United
States, and he spoke of the Soviet Union being eager to take advantage of it
to spread communism.

Truman was not afraid of offending the Soviet Union's diplomats and was described
as having used "mule driver's language" with foreign minister Molotov. Truman
was impatient with talk about the number of non-communists
in the governments of those nations occupied by the Soviet Union. He called
Romania and Bulgaria police states, and in a speech on 27 October 1945 he
announced that the United States would recognize no government "imposed upon
any nation by the force of any foreign power."

In the US Senate the Soviet Union was under attack. Senator Burton Wheeler
of Montana proclaimed that the Soviet Union was in Eastern Europe because
the United States had appeased it. From the Senate came announcements
that Soviet aggression was on the march, and there were calls for no more appeasement.

On February 9, 1946, Britain's former prime minister, Winston
Churchill, standing alongside Truman, gave a major address
in Truman's
home state, Missouri. In the speech he said that an "iron
curtain"
had fallen from the city of
Stettin
on the Baltic Sea to the city of Triest
on the Adriatic and that in front of the curtain were "Communist Fifth Columns."
Churchill criticized the Soviet Union, saying:

We cannot be blind to the fact that the
liberties enjoyed by individual citizens throughout the United States and
throughout the British Empire are not valid in a considerable number of
countries, some of which are very powerful.

But he was adamant about the talk
that could be heard in the US about the inevitability of
another war. He said that he repelled that idea, and still
more that a war was “imminent.”
He added:

We British have also our
twenty years Treaty of Collaboration and Mutual Assistance
with Soviet Russia. I agree with Mr. Bevin, the Foreign
Secretary of Great Britain, that it might well be
a fifty years treaty so far as we are concerned. We aim at
nothing but mutual assistance and collaboration with Russia… I
have a strong admiration and regard for the valiant
Russian people and for my wartime comrade, Marshall Stalin.
There is deep sympathy and goodwill in Britain – and I doubt
not here also – towards the peoples of all the Russias
and a resolve to persevere through many differences and rebuffs
in establishing lasting friendships. We understand
the Russian need to be secure on her western frontiers by
the removal of all possibility of German aggression. We welcome
Russia to her rightful place among the leading nations of
the world. We welcome her flag upon the seas. Above all,
we welcome, or should welcome, constant, frequent and growing
contacts between the Russian people and our own people on
both sides of the Atlantic.

In continuing his speech, Churchill said of the United Nations that, “We must make sure that
its work is fruitful, that it is a reality and not a sham." Churchill was demonstrating a frame of mind far from the anti-internationalism and anti-communism
of the fascists, but the Soviet newspaper Pravda didn't see it that way. It described Churchill as
a "warmonger" and compared him to Goebbels and Hitler. Stalin used Churchill’s
speech to reinforce his claim that conflict
with the West was inevitable and to persuade people that
a threat from the capitalist West made adherence to his policies
and leadership in their interest.